Lush Vegetation Brings Locusts to Eastern Australia

Lush Vegetation Brings Locusts to Eastern Australia
  • Credit:

    NASA image created by Jesse Allen, using data provided by the United State Department of Agriculture Foreign Agriculture Service and processed by Jennifer Small and Assaf Anyamba, NASA GIMMS Group at Goddard Space Flight Center. Caption by Holli Riebeek.

For central Australia, the late summer and early fall of 2010 was eventful, starting with rain, and leading to floods, plants, and finally insects. Between the end of February and early March, unusually heavy rain fell across Australia’s dry interior. Parts of central Australia received more rain in 11 days than they usually do in a year, and some places recorded rainfall totals more than double the total rainfall for all of 2009, said the Australian Bureau of Meteorology.

The extreme rain brought floods, but it also turned the desert green, as shown in this vegetation index image. The image was made with measurements from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer on the NOAA-18 POES satellite acquired throughout March 2010. Areas where plant growth was higher than the 2006–2009 average are green. Places where plants grew less than average are brown.

The intersecting corners of South Australia, Queensland, and New South Wales are intensely green, indicating explosive plant growth during March. The green landscape provided ample habitat for locusts, and by the end of March, several bands of young locusts had infested New South Wales, northern South Australia, and southwest Queensland, said the Australian Plague Locust Commission.

The areas where locusts had been observed in March (see Distribution of Australian plague locusts: 1 March to 31 March 2010) are the same areas that also experienced unusually high plant growth. With ample habitat, the insects thrived. The commission anticipated that swarms of locusts would develop throughout April. The swarming locusts consume crops. The locusts had already destroyed thousands of hectares of crops and pasture as of April 14, reported AFP.

  1. References

  2. AFP. (2010, April 14). Locust plague hits eastern Australia. Accessed April 15, 2010.
  3. Australian Plague Locust Commission. (2010, April 6). Locust bulletin April 2010. Department of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Forestry, Australian Government. Accessed April 15, 2010.
  4. Lindsey, R. (2002, September 18). Locust! NASA’s Earth Observatory. Accessed April 15, 2010.
  5. National Climate Center. (2010, March 10). A significant rainfall event for central and eastern Australia. Bureau of Meteorology, Australian Government. Accessed April 15, 2010.

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Metadata

  • Data Date:

    March 1 - 31, 2010
  • Visualization Date:

    April 15, 2010
  • Sensor(s):

    NOAA-18 POES - AVHRR
NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration